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I would, but don't have any steel stock to make one with. There's a place not too far away that sells scaffold poles for 60p (around 75 cents) a foot, so could have a long enough stack and two decent legs for a few dollars.
I don't disagree, this ancient stick welder has a mind of it's own. Same steel, same cleanliness, same angle, same size of arc and one looks like the nice one above and then next just blows chunks.hogaboomer wrote: ↑July 7th, 2020, 7:05 pmNothing wrong with that weld. Some of the other ones look a little questionable, though.![]()
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That's pushing it a bit!
Cheers pal, need to grab some chain next time I'm at the hardware store.Dirtytires wrote: ↑July 8th, 2020, 12:51 pmDon’t beat yourself up with the door springing a bit. Most of the time it’s not your fault. A good percentage of tanks will release tension unevenly as they are cut and will spring a little. This is easily fixed with a chain and bottle jack tho.
Aye cheers - it's getting a wash out today before the proper stuff.
Yes it is galvanised, but I've run a wire brush down the inside chimney sweep style, and as it's the flue I didn't think it would matter that much. It's had two mega hot burnouts as well.Dirtytires wrote: ↑July 11th, 2020, 11:11 amAbsolutely nothing wrong with a long chimney. If it ever gets to the point of being too long, you can always add two chimneys of half the length and mount them side by side.
Did I hear you say the chimney pipe was galvanized? Most of us don’t like to use galvanized material in a smoker.